Hey, guys.
I just started refurbishing a lemon of a 1997 Brasilia Portofino. I've take the boiler out and completely apart and given all the fittings, copper lines, and the boiler itself a few descale baths and have a question.
When I took everything apart, the insides looked like relics from the Titanic. Seriously, very scaled up. I used Urnex Dezcal (citric acid, aluminum salts, and sulfamic acid) in a five gallon bucket, sumberged the boiler and all the fittings, copper plumbing, etc. and left them in for 30 minutes for each bath (per instructions). The first bath went really well with tons of fizz and jets of sludge coming off. It took care of the vast majority of the scale, leaving only a layer of black hard scale on some portions of the inside of the boiler and heat exchangers and a lot of bright, shiny copper. The second bath accomplished nothing, leaving the same black layer. The same with the third bath.
Since the above method isn't doing it for me anymore, I'm ready to change angles of attack and use a prolonged straight citric acid soak. Here's where my question lies. I've dug through as many forums and sources as I can find and some people are raving about letting their boilers soak for a week while others swear that you can do serious damage to the copper after only a few hours. Right when the discussions seem to be heading in a direction of consensus everyone gives up their positions.
I know that it depends on the strength of the solution and amount of scale because as the acid dissolves scale it becomes more basic and eventually neutralized. I don't want to let it sit for a week in a neutralized solution that's not doing anything but I also don't want to walk away for a couple hours and return to a bucket full of loose copper where my boiler used to be.
Here's the question: Is there a general rule of thumb for the length of time scaled copper boilers can effectively soak in a reasonably strong citric acid bath without damaging it?
Thanks!
Tags:
-
▶ Reply to This